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Teck Resources Ltd. is doubling down on its greenhouse gas emissions targets, announcing it will aim to reduce carbon intensity in its operations by 33 per cent over the next 10 years.

The Vancouver-based mining company says the goal is in addition to its commitment made in early February to be carbon neutral across all its operations by 2050.

The news comes a few weeks after it shelved its $20.6-billion Frontier oil sands mining project, citing tensions in Canada over Indigenous rights, climate change and resource development.

Teck is offering specific environmental promises, including procuring half of the electricity demands of its operations in Chile from clean energy by then end of 2020 and 100 per cent by 2030. It says it will accelerate the adoption of zero-emissions alternatives for transportation by displacing the equivalent of 1,000 internal combustion engine vehicles by 2025.

It also vowed to shift to seawater or low-quality water sources for operations in water-scarce regions, work toward having zero industrial waste by 2040 and hire more women and Indigenous people.

“We have set ambitious new goals for carbon reduction, water stewardship, health and safety, and other areas because we believe that a better world is made possible through better mining,” CEO Don Lindsay said in a statement.

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